India vs South Africa: Unstoppable Virat Kohli Leads India To 5-1 Series Win Over South Africa
Captain Virat Kohli slammed his 35th century as India crushed South Africa by eight wickets in the sixth One-Day International in Centurion to clinch the six-match series 5-1.
- Posted by Dattaraj Thaly
- Updated: February 17, 2018 09:47 am IST
Highlights
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India crushed South Africa by eight wickets in the sixth ODI
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This is the first ever bilateral series win by India in South Africa
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Kohli remained unbeaten on 129 runs
Captain Virat Kohli slammed his 35th century as India crushed South Africa by eight wickets in the sixth One-Day International in Centurion to clinch the six-match series 5-1. This is the first ever bilateral series win by India on South African soil. Put into bat by India, South Africa were bowled out for a meagre 204 in the dead rubber. Chasing the target, India romped home in just 32.1 overs. Kohli remained unbeaten on 129, an innings studded with 19 boundaries and two sixes.
Kohli was in a punishing mood as he personally anchored Proteas' biggest humiliation in a bilateral series at home in last 17 years. The last time South Africa lost 1-5 was back in 2001-02 season against a champion Australian side.
Kohli also became the fastest to 9500 ODI runs completing the feat in only 200 innings -- 17 less than AB de Villiers.
Such has been Kohli's dominance in the series, that after his aggregate of 558 runs, the next best is Shikhar Dhawan (323), who is more than 200 runs behind his skipper.
Earlier, playing his first match of the series, young pacer Shardul Thakur claimed four wickets to skittle South Africa for 204. For South Africa, all-rounder Khaya Zondo top-scored with a 74-ball 54, laced with three boundaries and two sixes on a good batting track, where most of the other batsmen failed against a disciplined Indian bowling.
Apart from Thakur, the wrist spin duo of Yuzvendra Chahal (2/38) and Kuldeep Yadav (1/51) shared three wickets between them. Jasprit Bumrah also gave good support by taking two wickets.
For his brilliant form in the series, captain Kohli was adjudged Man of the Match and Man of the Series.
Kohli took 82 balls to reach his 35th century with the help of 17 boundaries that saw him break a plethora of records.
Sachin Tendulkar, who is on top of the list with 49 centuries, had taken 309 innings to reach 35 centuries. Kohli got there in his 200th innings.
Kohli also became the first Indian batsman to score three centuries in a bilateral series.
Sourav Ganguly and VVS Laxman have scored three centuries but not in a bilateral series. Ganguly scored three centuries during the 2003 World Cup in South Africa, while Laxman slammed three tons during the 2004 VB Series in Australia.
Not just that, he also became the first man to score 500 runs or more in a bilateral ODI series.
The record was previously held by his team-mate Rohit Sharma, who scored 491 runs in the six-match series against Australia.
The record of most runs as captain in a bilateral series now also belong to Kohli. Australia's George Bailey is second in the list with 478 runs against India in 2013-14. The Australian is followed by South Africa's AB de Villiers, who achieved the feat twice - 367 runs vs Pakistan in 2012-13 and 358 runs vs India in 2015-16.
In the process, Kohli has now most runs in a bilateral ODI series against South Africa in South Africa, a record previously held by England's Kevin Pietersen. Pietersen had scored 454 runs in a six-match series in 2005.
(With PTI inputs)